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This sums up why I stopped playing this game as passionately and as much as I did. I enjoyed playing Warwick top/mid, Morgana jungle, Quinn adc, or Veigar support. Most games had someone being completely upset that I picked that champion. Even though I won many of the games while being a huge contributor for the team they always ended up being a game I didn't want to play anymore.

I didn't like the way the game was designed, and how the game kept pushing people into linear choices like World of Warcraft has devolved into.

Blocks in my town? I don't live near a pokestop, there are no blocks where I live. I literally have to drive 15 minutes around or walk through a desert to get to another "block". If the radius is now 200m there is absolutely no way this will help me.

You seem like a very well rounded player, but there are some things you could work on. Communication and Game Knowledge is something I would advise.

Communication:

You said you would be working on more accurate and clean callouts. I suggest learning the names of the perches, rooms, and other doodads to give more accurate locations. On King's Row you could use Hotel, Theatre, etc. instead of bottom right, top left, etc. Balcony, Control Room, on VI/Hana etc.

Call out your weaknesses earlier. Your team can cover your weaknesses, in several spots a Roadhog hook could've saved you and freed you up a bit if he knew about the Soldier or Genji earlier.

Don't be afraid to suggest support changes and tank changes. As someone mentioned below a Mercy was a much better pick for that King's Row push. Reinhardt ruins S76's day when he activates his ultimate.

Game Knowledge:

You seem to have a lot of experience, and know what everyone does. However, learn the comps, learn what can improve your comp against the enemy's. Swap if you must. As noted above, dropping Lucio for Mercy, Pharah for Soldier, or bringing in a Reinhardt was more logical.

Know the maps your weak on, know what locations your hero loves, and what locations your team and enemy are weak with. In your KR game after you swapped from Pharah, and called for the Junkrat to swap you had no cover in high elevation locations. The enemy Pharah had free reign over your entire team, especially since your Reaper was out of position most of the game.

Your priority targets are much better than mine, and you seem to be able to find the right target in your field of view the majority of the time.

Other than that you look solid. Don't be afraid to make a risky play though, as there are a lot of mentions of over extension. Just remember to plan your outs when you pick a fight.

Your ability use should not be spammed. For example, shielding an ally from a crowd control is more effective than a few hits from an enemy. Even if you use it to charge your energy level, use it during safe times: when an enemy Roadhog's hook is on cooldown, or an enemy Mei's ultimate isn't fully charged.

Shield others when they are in danger. Shield yourself often, and always keep track of enemy reloads. In one of your fights you popped your shield as Winston was reloading.

Shielding others is only beneficial if they take damage, so avoid shielding Reinhardt's with their shield at full health.

Your ultimate ability is a game changer. Try to get their healer in it, especially a Mercy, but don't risk losing a strong combo with a friendly Hanzo or Pharah.

Play every hero, and understand what they do, and their limits.

Know the layouts of the map, getting stuck on walls can lose you valuable time or get you killed. You should be able to run backwards through every map while under attack without getting caught or stuck.

Move unpredictably, so enemies can't lead their attacks.

Jumping and crouching is beneficial to dodging many attacks such as Junkrat's autos or Hanzo's Scattershot.

Game Sense:

Keep track of allies ultimate charges -- Use Tab, occasionally when broadcasting your ultimate charge in-game other players will do the same.

Keep track of enemy locations, knowing the sounds all heroes make such as: Reaper's obnoxiously loud audio cue when he teleports, or the whizzing sound of a missed sniper shot from a Widow.

Know your cover locations when pushing points and payloads, crouch does wonders in some locations.

Keep note of locations of your healers.

Do not tunnel vision, and be aware of the other enemies hiding in corners or Crow's Nests.

Game Knowledge:

Typically this comes with experience, but learn from every mistake. Even if you aren't making mistakes, learning from your enemies mistakes is beneficial.

Understand why some pushes fail, and why some succeed. The game does have a luck factor, but sometimes a point is taken because an enemy Mercy healed the wrong person.

Change your strategy, and more importantly change your hero. Know what your team needs, and adjust to it. This does not mean swapping from a healer to a DPS; although, some occasions call for it.

Additionally, do not swap too much, if you play a game and you haven't used one ultimate by the time the game is over it is likely you're doing something wrong.

Do not expect your teammates to know what you're doing. Like using your blinker when changing lanes, it isn't for you, it's for the people around you. Communicate a strategy, and when you are experienced enough, suggest hero-swaps when needed.

Know your health pack locations.

Miscellaneous:

Turn on the kill feed. Keep an eye on who is dying and what was killed. Death timers are 10 seconds.

At lower levels use the pre-game time to warm up, stop this as you get higher you don't want to give information away to enemies.

Swap between players in spectate. Know where they are, and what they're doing.

Watch Deathcams, and keep track of enemy's ultimate charges.

Work on your lobbing aim; play some Junkrat for a dozen hours.

Remember the payload heals, make love to it.

And for crying out loud, use your spray like you're marking your territory.

Overall, the best you can do is play more. You can stay with competitive if you like, but you'll get a crash course in cheap tricks and game knowledge in quick play. Learn the heroes, if you cannot mentally go through every hero and their abilities without any aids you need to play more. There was a clear difference in your play styles from your loss and win. Focus more on the game, if one of those games you were distracted you will notice. If you were hungry or tired you will notice. There is a lot of advice in this thread, organize it in your own way and use it. Good luck.

Edit: I thought I added it, but I must've accidentally edited it out. Turn on allied health bars on Zarya.

Same boat man. Just long losing streaks occur. After every game if there is a bad apple in my queue; like the Mei trolls, I will often "Avoid Player" in the social menu. If there is someone I saw which stood out and want to play with in the future I'd prefer them.

Just find your fun, fall in love with the game and not the competition. It'll help.

A lot of online competitive shooters have had some kind of cheating third-party software available at release or within a week of release.

In the case of Call of Duty, especially for PC, the way they dealt with cheaters was pathetic. Blizzard needs to buckle down on this soon, and quickly.

Although, I want to stay dubious to the idea that cheating in Overwatch is very prominent. I will openly accuse people that they are cheating in all-chat even at the expense of looking dumb. The way I see it is if they're hacking, they might stop, and if they aren't well it may be seen as a compliment in some weird demented way.

This probably sounds awful but what do you report them under? The only options I see are Battle Tag Offense, Harassment, and Spam. I've been tossing 'em under Harassment, am I missing a scroll bar or something? Thanks.

And then NAFTA was drafted soon after. Which inherently killed thousands of jobs in Latin America. These countries couldn't compete with the wages, and had to reduce their pay by half. What happens when you can't afford to make money(a living) by doing something your family has been doing for generations?

You jump onto the only thing that does, drugs, or you risk making the journey into the US with the desert for a better life.

Why are there illegals here? Why do they keep trying to come? Why is there illegal drug trafficking?

A combination of policies since the 1960s, and then exponentially increased in the mid 90s.

A wall won't fix this situation, they already have ladders anyway for the current walls.